Publication | Open Access
Cardiac actin is the major actin gene product in skeletal muscle cell differentiation in vitro.
188
Citations
33
References
1984
Year
Cardiac MuscleMuscle FunctionAdult Skeletal MuscleCytoskeletonMuscle DevelopmentCellular PhysiologyMuscle PhysiologySkeletal MuscleCardiac ActinCell PhysiologyHealth SciencesMechanobiologyCardiac ReprogrammingCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyCell MotilityActin MrnaCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicine
We examined the expression of alpha-skeletal, alpha-cardiac, and beta- and gamma-cytoskeletal actin genes in a mouse skeletal muscle cell line (C2C12) during differentiation in vitro. Using isotype-specific cDNA probes, we showed that the alpha-skeletal actin mRNA pool reached only 15% of the level reached in adult skeletal muscle and required several days to attain this peak, which was then stably maintained. However, these cells accumulated a pool of alpha-cardiac actin six times higher than the alpha-skeletal actin mRNA peak within 24 h of the initiation of differentiation. After cells had been cultured for an additional 3 days, this pool declined to 10% of its peak level. In contrast, over 95% of the actin mRNA in adult skeletal muscle coded for alpha-actin. This suggests that C2C12 cells express a pattern of sarcomeric actin genes typical of either muscle development or regeneration and distinct from that seen in mature, adult tissue. Concurrently in the course of differentiation the beta- and gamma-cytoskeletal actin mRNA pools decreased to less than 10% of their levels in proliferating cells. The decreases in beta- and gamma-cytoskeletal actin mRNAs are apparently not coordinately regulated.
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